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No Persuasive Evidence of Financial Instability

IMG Auteur
Publié le 22 mars 2013
1708 mots - Temps de lecture : 4 - 6 minutes
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Rubrique : Editoriaux

Signs Of The Times

"Disposable income, or the money left over after taxes, plunged 4 percent, the biggest plunge since monthly records began in 1959."

- Bloomberg, March 1

"The riskiest U.S. companies are tapping institutional investors at the fastest pace ever."

- Bloomberg, March 1

"U.K. Manufacturing unexpectedly shrank in February as new orders plunged."

- Bloomberg, March 1

"German factory orders unexpectedly fell in January as the sovereign debt crisis curbed demand in the euro area."

- Bloomberg, March 7

Unexpected plunges in economic numbers provide an interesting contrast against reckless behaviour by investors and central bankers.

"Private equity firms have lost no time taking advantage of record low yields in global leveraged loan markets. And like a school of piranhas sensing blood, they have thrown themselves into the fray with gusto. The frenzy of activity comes as institutional investors...demand assets that carry a higher yield."

- Financial Times, March 7

"Collateralized loan obligations paying the lowest rates in five years are being snapped up by investors, providing fuel that's contributing to the biggest surge in corporate buy outs since before the financial crisis."

- Bloomberg, March 8

"I view the balance of risk as still calling for a highly accommodative monetary policy to support a stronger recovery."

- Janet Yellen, the Fed's # 2 official, Bloomberg, March 4

She added that there was no "persuasive evidence" of financial instability. Clearly, Yellen is reading too many internal reports and has never spent any time as a margin clerk.

However, on the same day, March 4th, Bloomberg reported:

"Former Fed chairman, Paul Volker, said U.S. central bank officials may find it difficult to rein in their historical stimulus at the appropriate time-- 'because there is a lot of liquor out there'."


Stock Markets

High sentiment and momentum readings clocked in January were followed by five weeks of consolidation. This month's rise includes 10 consecutive trading days up for the Dow, including today. It's a sign of enthusiasm.

Weekly RSI momentum is up to 74, which seems to be a spike. This compares to the 73 reached a couple of times with the "rounding" top of 2007. Higher readings of 76 and 78 were only accomplished on the power rallies out of the 2002 and 2009 crashes.

The sharp plunge in U.S. disposable income could be mainly due to radical policies. But "unexpected" bad numbers in England and Europe are telling a sad story that not much of their "stimulus" is going into GDP, which Janet Yellen may be focusing on. Perhaps Volker has a broader perspective on financial conditions.

While the incoming tide of "liquor" seems not to be lifting the GDP and employment boats in the harbor, it has been lifting financial instruments.

This shows up in the Broker-Dealer Index (XBD), which soared to a Daily RSI of 85 through most of the first two weeks in February. The Weekly got to 73. Both

momentums reached the highest in years. And the latest rally has made it to 110 on the index, which is a big test of the 110 reached in February. Momentum then was at 65, now it's at 73, which suggests the test will fail.

Of interest, is that in 2007 and in 2011, Broker-Dealers led the high in the S&P.

Another topping indicator is the Percent Bulls on the NYSE Composite and it is showing negative divergence.

There are now more indicators registering conditions for a reversal than in late January. We would continue to sell the rallies.


Currencies

The US dollar continues to rise against the euro, C$, yen and sterling. The DX did trade at the 82 level, but for only two days. Then, yesterday's action accomplished an Outside Reversal, to the Upside that took it up to 83.

As noted a few weeks ago, the Daily RSI became overbought at the first of the month. As mentioned last week, the Weekly RSI is a neutral momentum, which suggested, eventually, the rise had further to go.

Obviously, the 84 level reached in last summer's concerns about Euro debt default represents considerable resistance. In looking at the chart back to 1980 there has been a tendency to respect resistance levels. Other support levels, such as at 71.33 in 2008 (just before the stock market began its crash) and the big test at 72.70 in 2011.

Before that the big high with the Telecom Crash was at 121 in 2001-2002.

On the near-term, the dollar's advance could pause. Rising above 84 would indicate that the karma of the marketplace is beginning to overwhelm the dogma of policymakers. The Canadian dollar suffered its sharpest sell-off since commodities tanked in 2011. But, on this move the CRB only declined a little. The weekly RSI is down to a level that could limit the decline.


Commodities

Copper declined to 3.47 which is the support level. At 30, the Daily RSI was also at "support". Often copper can rally into March, but the spring "seasonal" could be deferred to next month.

Much the same holds for the base metals index (GYX). A rebound seems possible. However, real copper prices have been unusually high and have yet to correct. A recent Bloomberg report about the governing classes in egalitarian China is fascinating:

"Ninety members of the National People's Congress are on the list of China's 1,000 richest people."

Beyond China's industrial demand for copper, there has been China's investment demand for copper. This reminds of 1996 when "Mr. Copper" in Japan had run up a huge position beyond economic demand. Herbert Black, a wealthy metals trader in Montreal, was instrumental in bringing the scam down. It cost Sumitomo $2.6 billion.

Much has been written about the uniqueness of the great change in China: The turn to industrialization, accompanied by migration from rural to cities.

Much the same happened in North America during the last half of the 1800s. Economist W.W. Rostow determined that in the late 1840s the US had 5 percent of global industrial production. By the 1880s this had increased to an impressive 29 percent. A long economic expansion segued into an era of inflation in tangible and financial assets. This ended in 1873 as a classic bubble climaxed. That marked the beginning of a Great Depression that ended in 1895. The "unique" transformation of the US economy and massive migrations from rural to urban life had little influence on that great and global contraction.

China's "uniqueness" is in the market, but its unusual position in base metals has yet to be resolved. Mining and smelting stocks were outstanding performers into the 1873 mania. The index reached over 500 and slumped to around 20 before the depression was over.

This time around, base metal miners (SPTMN) soared from 105 in 2002 to 958 in 2007. After plunging to 177 in 2008, the index "flew" to 1600 in 1Q2011, when our Momentum Peak Forecaster kicked in. The next key low was at 781 last summer. The high in January was 1050 and last week's low of 875 took out the November low of 895.

The present rebound could gain a little more over the next few weeks. To be wary, taking out the 781 low of last summer would be very negative to the sector. And that means the global economy!

There has been little change in agricultural prices over the past week.

Crude oil sold off to 89.33 with an RSI at 30 a couple weeks ago. The rebound has made it to 92.50. There is resistance at the 94 level.


Credit Markets

Government compulsion to buy bonds of doubtful returns continues, accompanied by complacency on the buy and hold side. All participants have a "tiger by the tail" and dare not let go. For fear of being mauled.

This has been the case with every inflation, and all have been deliberate and not accidental. But due to exhaustion, all have ended. Recently the street is again in the mode that "printing" over the past few years will suddenly erupt in a massive surge in the CPI.

On March 7th a letter-writer headlined:

"Are You Prepared For Hyperinflation?"

Our point has been is that the "inflation" has been in financial assets - particularly in lower-grade bonds. And without speculator's compulsion to get leveraged the Fed's portion of credit creation would not happen.

Actually, inflation in financial assets has been "on" since inflation in consumer prices blew out in 1980.

More recently, Our February 14th edition reviewed the sequence of speculative highs set in different classes of bonds.

The first was in long-treasuries reaching 153 with last summer's European crisis. Then Munis accomplished the big surge with the MUB reaching 113.5 at the end of November.

The initial plunge was to 108.43 in mid-December and the rebound made it to 112.15 in January. The price traded down and up to the key high at 111.86 at the first of the month.

The drop to 109.67 is significant. Taking out the 109 level would be concerning.

The next support level is at 104. Another crisis would take it down to 90.

Emerging Market Bonds (EMB) became the next favourite on the run to 122.46 at the first of the year. Today's trade is at the 118 support level. Taking it out seems inevitable. The next level is at 105 and in the last crisis the market cleared at 60.

With some zest, Junk (JNK) is testing the momentum high set at 141. Taking out 40 turns the action down. In which case the next level is 36. In the crash it plunged to 18.

We look at this as a sequence of speculative surges and Junk is the last horse to run and it is getting tired.

On the bigger picture, our Gold/Commodities Index turned up in May 2007 a few weeks before all credit markets turned down. To the worst financial calamity since the 1930s.

It could take a few weeks to confirm the uptrend and that could be the "Death Cross" for orthodox investments in stocks, junk bonds and commodities. Not to overlook subscriptions in "hyper-inflation" letters.

Link to the March 15, 2013 'Bob and Phil Show' on TalkDigitalNetwork.com: http://talkdigitalnetwork.com/2013/03/dream-team-ii


This is part of Pivotal Events that was published for our subscribers March 14, 2013.


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"The US dollar continues to rise against the euro, C$, yen and sterling."

"On the near-term, the dollar's advance could pause."

First thing we gotta do is corrupt the language.

As a kid, I bought 5¢ candy bars. They now cost $1.00

I'm not sure I can handle much more of these advances/risings or whatever.
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"The US dollar continues to rise against the euro, C$, yen and sterling." "On the near-term, the dollar's advance could pause." First thing we gotta do is corrupt the language. As a kid, I bought 5¢ candy bars. They now cost $1.00 I'm not sure I can  Lire la suite
overtheedge - 22/03/2013 à 18:35 GMT
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